Improved ice-rack for refrigerators



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IMPROVED ICE-RACK FQR REFRIGERATORS.

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TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

Be it known that I, HENRY PENNIE, of the State, city, and county of NewYork, have invented an Improved Portable or Removable Metallic Ice-Rack;and I do hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exactdescription thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawings,which form part of this specification.

Inrefrigerators, the ice for cooling the contents is placed in areceptaclecallcd a trough," wherein it is customary to break the ice, asit is required for use elsewhere. Such trough is variously made ofslate, glass, wood covered with zinc, &c., and the bottom thereof isliable to be perforated, if zinc, and fractured, if of glass or slate,by the ice-pick, hatchet, or other sharp and pointed instruments usedfor breaking the ice. Said trough also receives the sediment and allforeign matter found combined with the ice.

The object of my invention is to provide, in a single article, acapacity for completely protecting the bottom of tho ice-trough againstall liability of injury fromthc ice-pick, as aforesaid, and also furnishfacilities, not hitherto afforded in refrigerators, for collecting andremoving all foreign matter deposited from the ice, thereby promotingcleanliness; this invention being designed more particularly as anarticle for application to refrigerators already in use, whether in partof glass, slate, or wood.

To enable others skilled in the art to make and use my invention, 1 willproceed to describe the same. In the annexed drawing- -Figure 1 showsthe article in perspective, and c Figure 2 illustrates its applicationto a refrigerator.

A is the ice-rack; it is corrugated in form, in order to present aslittle surface as possible to the ice, to support the same above thewater formed by its melting, and to provide for carrying off the water.The corrugations present ridges for the support of the ice, while thedepressions serve as gutters to collect the water andsediment from theice. If, however, such refuse is allowed to flow off the surface intothe bottom of the trough, it becomes inconvenient of removal, and isliable to choke up the leader C, which conducts the waste water from thetrough E. To prevent the refuse from leaving the surface of the rack,small cleats Bare provided, crossing the bottoms of the gutters; thesearrest all sediment andjforeign matter, causing the sameto be retained,while the water is allowed to flow off freely. A rim, a, is formedaround the edge, to impart stiffness. Handles D are fixed to each side,by which the rack may be lifted out, when required to be cleansed.

This article is now being applied to refrigerators, and is found toanswer well in practice, fulfilling all the oflices for which it isintended with great success.

I do not claim a cast-iron ice-rack.

Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire tosecure by Letters Patent, is-

The use of the cross-cleats B, for the purpose specified, in acorrugated metallic ice-rack, substantially as described.

. HENRY, PENN IE.

Witnesses:

N. B. Brown,

Earns H. Smrn.

